Distinguished Achievement Award Winners

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George Kunze ’45

George Kunze ’45
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Year Awarded: 1984

College: Graduate Studies

Award Level: Staff

George Kunze ’45

George Kunze ’45
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Year Awarded: 1966

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Research

Way Kuo

Way Kuo
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Year Awarded: 1999

College: Engineering

Award Level: Research

Yue Kuo

Yue Kuo
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Year Awarded: 2012

Yue Kuo joined the faculty of the Department of Chemical Engineering in the Dwight Look College of Engineering in 1998. He is the Dow Professor of Chemical Engineering and holds joint appointments in the Departments of Electrical Engineering and Materials Science and Engineering. Dr. Kuo earned a doctorate in engineering science from Columbia University in 1979. Before coming to Texas A&M he served in industry for nearly 20 years.



Dr. Kuo's research concentrates on nano and microelectronics with special interests in semiconductor materials, processes, and devices as well as thin films and plasma technology. In his thin film nano and microelectronics research laboratory, he develops new materials, novel processes, and advanced devices with the ultimate goal of creating high-performance, highly reliable, manufacturable devices for current and future applications. The results of his research are published in technical papers, proceedings, and patents. Many of his publications are credited as being among the most downloaded, editor selected, poster awarded, or news media quoted papers. His technical contributions have been recognized with numerous awards and honors, such as the Electrochemical Society’s Electronics and Photonics Division award and IBM awards. He is a Fellow of the Electrochemical Society and the IEEE Electron Devices Society.



As a leader in the worldwide thin film transistor and related solid-state community, Dr. Kuo has been very active in the Electrochemical Society and other professional organizations for 25 years. In addition he has been involved in organizing or chairing 70 international conferences. He is a much sought after speaker who has delivered nearly 130 keynote, plenary, and invited speeches to audiences at international conferences, universities and research and development centers around the world.

College: Engineering

Award Level: Research

Linda Lacey

Linda Lacey
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Year Awarded: 2005

College: Academic Affairs

Award Level: Staff

Charles W. Lafon

Charles W. Lafon
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Year Awarded: 2008

Charles Lafon joined the faculty of Texas A&M in 2000 after earning his Ph.D. at the University of Tennessee. He was named a Montague-Center for Teaching Excellence Scholar in 2004–05, and he received The Association of Former Students College-Level Distinguished Achievement Award for Teaching, in 2006. He teaches an introductory course in physical geography; upper-level undergraduate courses in regional climatology, biogeography, and field geography; and a graduate course in biogeography. To promote his students’ academic and professional development and to stimulate their enthusiasm for geography, Dr. Lafon has designed a number of field, laboratory, and computer-based assignments, one of which led to a publication in a top geographic education journal.



Dr. Lafon serves as the Undergraduate Director and chair of the Undergraduate Committee in the Department of Geography. Currently he is leading the department’s efforts to revise and improve its undergraduate program.



Dr. Lafon has taken numerous graduate and undergraduate students with him on field research expeditions to the Appalachian Mountains, northern Sweden, and East Texas. He enjoys fieldwork and can think of no better way for students to learn and become excited about geography than to participate in field research activities. He also works closely with students to help them publish their research.

College: Geosciences

Award Level: Teaching

Dimitris Lagoudas

Dimitris Lagoudas
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Year Awarded: 2014

Dimitris C. Lagoudas is a University Distinguished Professor and the inaugural recipient of the John and Bea Slattery Chair in Aerospace Engineering. He serves as associate vice chancellor for engineering research for The Texas A&M University System, senior associate dean for research in the Dwight Look College of Engineering and deputy director of the Texas Engineering Experiment Station (TEES), and the director of the Texas Institute for Intelligent Materials and Structures. He received his Ph.D. from Lehigh University. Dr. Lagoudas joined the Texas A&M faculty in 1992. His research involves the design, characterization and modeling of multifunctional material systems at nano, micro, and macro levels. His research team is one of the most recognized internationally in the area of modeling and characterization of shape memory alloys (materials that undergo a reversible thermo-mechanical phase transition so they “remember” their shapes) that are giving rise to applications in the aerospace, automotive, and medical areas.



Dr. Lagoudas has co-authored more than 400 scientific publications with 165 in archival journals. He has also co-authored a textbook with his graduate students. He is a TEES fellow, a Texas A&M University Faculty Fellow, and a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and the Institute of Physics. In addition, he has received numerous other significant awards.



A colleague at another university commented that the impact Dr. Lagoudas “has had on the aerospace profession and industry is profound.” The smart memory alloys framework his team developed has been an enabling step toward integrating active materials into commercial and military aircraft for increased fuel economy, increased performance, and decreased noise. Another colleague adds, “For any significant recognition the requirements can be boiled down to two words: quality and impact. Professor Lagoudas’ contributions have these in abundance.”

College: College of Engineering

Award Level: Research

Glen Laine

Glen Laine
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Year Awarded: 1997

College: Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Science

Award Level: Research

Charles LaMotte

Charles LaMotte
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Year Awarded: 1957

College: Science

Award Level: Teaching

Sandi Lampo '93

Sandi Lampo '93
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Year Awarded: 2010

College: Mays Business School

Award Level: Teaching

Carl Landiss

Carl Landiss
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Year Awarded: 1970

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Teaching

Herbert Lang

Herbert Lang
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Year Awarded: 1970

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

Rafael Lara-Alecio

Rafael Lara-Alecio
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Year Awarded: 2005

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Extension/ Continuing Education

Rafael Lara-Alecio

Rafael Lara-Alecio
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Year Awarded: 2014

Rafael Lara-Alecio joined the faculty of the College of Education and Human Development in 1991, after earning a Ph.D. from the University of Utah. He is the director of the Bilingual Education Program and the Center for Research and Development for Dual Language and Literacy Acquisition in the Department of Educational Psychology. He has published more than 100 refereed manuscripts, including journal articles, book chapters, and technical reports. He is co-editor of the Handbook on Educational Theories, which serves as the first comprehensive collection of some of the most influential theories guiding research for graduate students, professors, and practitioners. He has received numerous awards, including the Texas Higher Education Honoree from the Texas Association of Bilingual Education, the Outstanding Research Award from the Department of Educational Psychology, and the Diversity Award from the Office of the Provost and the Office of the Vice President and Associate Provost for Diversity.



An external supporter describes Dr. Lara-Alecio as “one of a small handful of founding fathers” in the field of multiple language acquisition, adding that he has been central to the growth and development of the field. Another supporter credits Dr. Lara-Alecio with adding substantially to the basic body of knowledge in multiple language acquisition, which has contributed significantly to the improvement of education conditions for English learners in the United States and abroad. A colleague concludes “Dr. Lara-Alecio has the broad-range strengths of an invigorating scholar whose ideas and work impact schools and communities in healthy ways. His long and championing leadership has strengthened a successful curriculum development for educators and schools and contributes to the growth of a culturally responsive K?12 pedagogy.”

College: College of Education and Human Development

Award Level: Research

Alvin Larke

Alvin Larke
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Year Awarded: 1993

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Teaching

David R. Larson

David R. Larson
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Year Awarded: 2006

College: Science

Award Level: Teaching

W. John Lee

W. John Lee
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Year Awarded: 2001

College: Engineering

Award Level: Extension/ Continuing Education

George Lees

George Lees
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Year Awarded: 2009

College: College of Veterinary Medicine

Award Level: Research

Rudolph Leighton ’56

Rudolph Leighton ’56
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Year Awarded: 1959

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Teaching

August Lenert ’43

August Lenert ’43
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Year Awarded: 1958

College: Engineering

Award Level: Teaching

Jack Lewis

Jack Lewis
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Year Awarded: 1961

College: Engineering

Award Level: Extension/ Continuing Education

Roscoe Lewis

Roscoe Lewis
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Year Awarded: 1977

College: Science

Award Level: Teaching

Qi Li ’91

Qi Li ’91
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Year Awarded: 2013

Qi Li earned his Ph.D. in economics from Texas A&M in 1991 and began his academic career at the University of Guelph. He returned to Texas A&M as a faculty member in 1999 where he is Hugh Roy Cullen Professor in Liberal Arts. He is a Fellow of the Journal of Econometrics and currently is associate editor for six leading journals. Dr. Li is a theoretical econometrician who specializes in nonparametric econometrics. His frequently cited book Nonparametric Econometrics is the definitive text of the subfield and is a common reference source for top researchers and a textbook of choice in top graduate programs. He has published more than 100 articles in refereed journals and his publications have garnered more than 3,500 citations.



Advances in theoretical econometrics are fundamental to the advance of economic science. Econometricians are those who apply mathematics and statistics together with economics to verify economic theories. Qi Li is a leading econometrician, particularly in the area of nonparametric econometrics. He is internationally recognized for two lines of research that have had a major impact on the direction of scholarship in nonparametric econometrics. In the first case, he cracked a fundamental problem in applying the nonparametric regression modeling approach to situations involving both categorical and continuous data. This breakthrough is of huge value to all social scientists who work on problems involving discrete data. In the second case, he has developed consistency tests in the context of the nonparametric regression model that can be used to guide the choice of functional form and the choice of regressors for the regression function. These tests greatly enhance the attractiveness of the nonparametric approach to a wide audience of potential users, including non-economists. A supporter says that Li “ . . . is arguably the world’s leading researcher in nonparametric econometrics.”

College: Department of Economics

Award Level: Research

Peter Lieuwen

Peter Lieuwen
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Year Awarded: 1994

College: Liberal Arts

Award Level: Teaching

J. Timothy Lightfoot

J. Timothy Lightfoot
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Year Awarded: 2018

Timothy Lightfoot earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Northeast Louisiana State University in Monroe and a doctorate from the University of Tennessee. He completed post-doctoral study at John Hopkins University. He joined the faculty of the College of Education and Human Development in 2010 and is the Omar Smith Endowed Professor of Kinesiology and Director of the Sydney and JL Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance at Texas A&M University. He previously was a member of the faculties at Florida Atlantic University and the University of North Carolina. Dr. Lightfoot has published over 70 scientific, peer-reviewed articles on the genetics of daily physical activity and exercise endurance, as well as the physiological response to high-G exposure. Among his many honors and awards, Dr. Lightfoot is a Fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), an ACSM Certified Exercise Physiologist, a Registered Clinical Exercise Physiologist, a past-president of the Southeast Regional Chapter of the American College of Sports Medicine, and a past member of the Board of Trustees for the American College of Sports Medicine. He has been named Teacher of the Year at three different universities, was awarded the Henry Montoye Research Scholar Award by the Southeast American College of Sports Medicine, received the Outstanding Exercise Science Alumni Award from the University of Tennessee, and gave the keynote lectures at the 2013 Performing Arts Medical Association meeting and the 2014 national American College of Sports Medicine meeting. He will be awarded the national ACSM Citation Award in May 2018, and was recently named the Pease Family Scholar at Iowa State University. He is a native Texan and married to a brilliant and beautiful woman (Faith), used to race automobiles for fun, and has a passion for playing the bass guitar, which he does in live settings with a variety of bands.

College: Department of Health and Kinesiology

Award Level: Graduate Mentoring

Yvonna Lincoln

Yvonna Lincoln
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Year Awarded: 1997

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Research

Yvonna Lincoln

Yvonna Lincoln
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Year Awarded: 2009

College: College of Education and Human Development

Award Level: Research

Jean Marie Linhart

Jean Marie Linhart
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Year Awarded: 2014

Jean Marie Linhart earned her Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Austin. She joined the faculty of the College of Science in 2008. She has received a college-level Teaching Award from The Association of Former Students at Texas A&M and recognition as Instructor of the Quarter from ITT Technical Institute in Austin. She is co-principal investigator on two National Science Foundation grants that foster interdisciplinary undergraduate research.



Dr. Linhart was nominated by the Student Council of the College of Science based on her outstanding success in engaging undergraduate students in research, which is demonstrated by the awards her students have won at both local and national levels. A colleague revealed that much of her success with student engagement is rooted in her reputation for being “the campus expert on predicting the spread of zombie epidemics,” a favorite project for students in Math 442, Mathematical Modeling. Highlights from just two semesters of Math 442 include students winning: first place for an undergraduate mathematics poster in A&M’s Student Research Week, first place for a video project in the Writing Center’s 10th Anniversary Contest, two prizes at the Mathematical Association of America’s MathFest, and a Goldwater Scholarship.



Another colleague reported that Dr. Linhart has been an exceptional asset to the Math department. In addition to teaching, she has been instrumental in summer Research Experiences for Undergraduates and in the department’s outreach activities. She was the main organizer of the very successful Math Mini-Fair, a daylong event where 150 K?12 students (together with their friends and family) participated in Problem Solving Contests, a Mathematical Art Room filled with Math art and activities, a puzzle/geometry room, and various Math movies and presentations.

College: College of Science

Award Level: Teaching

Mildred Litte

Mildred Litte
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Year Awarded: 1984

College: Education and Human Development

Award Level: Extension/ Continuing Education

Frank Litterst, Jr. ’43

Frank Litterst, Jr. ’43
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Year Awarded: 1984

College: Agriculture and Life Sciences

Award Level: Teaching

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